The NAPPC Honey Bee Health Task Force
The North American Pollinator Protection Campaign (NAPPC) is a collaborative group of scientists, government agencies, NGO’s, private industries and agricultural and environmental concerns that work together to bring the plight of pollinators to national attention and to be the most trusted resource for information and behaviors in support of pollinating animals and the plants with which they interact. NAPPC works for all species of pollinators across the whole of North America. NAPPC partners have formed specialist task forces to address all the issues that face pollinators, and one such group is the NAPPC Honey Bee Health Task Force.

The NAPPC Honey Bee Task Force has several functions, determining each year the recipients of honey bee health grants that have for the past four years supported research in honey bee genetics, pesticide exposure, nutrition and management. In addition, the task force is dedicated to providing the latest findings and perspectives on honey bee health to the public, policy makers and the press. The following honey bee health issues have been provided by that task force. We hope you find them useful, and we welcome questions and comments to info@nappc.org.

Honey Bee Health
So much of our agricultural productivity is dependent on the European honey bee (Apris mellifera) that it is no wonder that our attention is drawn to their plight. When the honey bee suffers, so does agriculture, and so, potentially do all who depend on the bounty that comes from animal pollinated angiosperms, the flowering plants from which we derive many of our most delicious and health-giving fruits and vegetables.

While honey bees are clearly not the only hard working pollinators that deliver a bounty to humans and other animals, their recent deaths from Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) starting in 2006 have captured the world’s attention. To date, CCD has been defined as a series of symptoms, but the cause and the cure have remained complex and elusive. CCD is not the only problem facing honey bees; in fact, in 2010 the overwintering losses were at the same unsustainable rates of over 30% but the cause seemed to be less from CCD than from other problems. Below is a list of the variety of issues facing honey bees.

The North American Pollinator Protection Campaign Scientists Report on Honey Bee Stressors

Parasites:The Varroa mite (Varroa destructor)
Is an external parasite that has spread from its original host, the Asian honey bee Apis cerana, to nearly all Western honey bees (Apis mellifera) worldwide. Virtually all European honey bees are highly vulnerable to Varroa mites, although some honey bee strains (VSH, Russians) show partial resistance to the mites. This mite weakens honey bees by sucking hemolymph (“blood”) from its host and by transmitting bee pathogens. A female mite reproduces by invading the cell of a bee larva just before capping. Once inside, the female lays eggs to produce offspring that feed together on the developing bee. The mother mite and her adult daughters emerge from the cell with the young adult bee host. Eventually, at high infestation rates, the mites overwhelm and kill the host colony. Beekeepers control Varroa mite populations by monitoring mite infestation rates and applying chemical treatments when mite populations become too large. Due to increased concerns over the effects of miticides on bees and mite resistance to commercial miticides, researchers are developing alternative approaches (“softer” chemical treatments, the genetics of mite resistance in honey bees, mite pheromones and hormones, and physical treatments) to control this mite.

Nosema ceranae
This microscopic fungus can weaken or even kill colonies when the majority of workers become infected. Spores of the fungus survive on wax combs and stored food inside colonies. When workers eat these spores the fungus invades the lining of the intestine. Highly infected bees cannot digest efficiently and die earlier. Beekeepers use antibiotics and disinfection of hives to control this disease.

Viruses

Thus far, more than 20 honey bee viruses have been identified. These viruses can impact bees in multiple ways, including killing developing larvae and pupae, decreasing the lifespan of adult bees, causing spasms and tremors, reducing cognitive skills, and impairing wing development so that bees cannot fly. Most honey bee colonies have multiple viruses, and the levels of these viruses can fluctuate throughout the year. Exposure to other stressors, particularly Varroa parasitization, can immunosuppress bees so that the effects of the viruses are more dramatic. The only treatment for viruses thus far is to feed the colony a solution of virus-specific RNA that enhances the bees' immune responses to these particular viruses, but these treatments only suppress the viral infections, and do not eradicate them. Other approaches that are being investigated include breeding bees with genetic resistance to the viruses.

Bacterial Diseases: American foulbrood (Paenibacillus larvae)
American foulbrood is an infection that kills young bees (brood) inside the wax cells in which they develop. This dead brood becomes a source of infection spread by workers nursing young brood. Some bees can detect and remove the diseased brood and this stops the disease from spreading. Beekeepers also use antibiotics to prevent the disease.

Pesticides:
Pesticides are usually man made chemicals designed to kill pest organisms, that may injure plants or animals including humans. Pests cause economic damage by reducing crop yields directly or by producing crop, or ornamental plant diseases, or by competing with crops, or by reducing animal and human health, or by damaging buildings and structures. Pesticides are categorized according to their intended use as well as by their chemical composition. Pesticides are widely used and are divided into insecticides/acaricides, used to control insects and mites or ticks, fungicides used to control plant diseases; rodenticides, used to control rodents; and herbicides used to prevent weeds from competing with crops, grasses or ornamental plants. Pesticides usually contain an active ingredient, with a known mechanism for killing the target pests. Pesticides vary widely in their safety to humans and the environment and are sold as a formulation with added ingredients that augment the action of the active material when mixed in water for application. More than 1200 chemicals are registered for use in the United States and are used in some 18,000 separate products sold under a variety of trade names. People who apply the more toxic pesticides must have training and a state issued license to use these materials.
Some insecticides have warnings or bee hazards on their label because they are toxic to honey bees, causing honey bee deaths. If the insecticide has a sub-lethal affect on honey bees it may result in reduced larval survival, altered foraging behavior or shortened lifespan of adult bees. The extent of the sub-lethal affects is still unknown.

Nutrition:
Honey bee colonies are healthier and stronger with access to pollen from diverse sources of flowering plants. However, floral diversity in landscapes has been reduced by intensive agriculture (single crops, few flowering weeds, limited hedgerows) and urbanization. In recent years, the pollination of early crops (such as almonds in California in February) has further increased the demand for strong colonies at times of year with few floral sources. Furthermore, changes in climate patterns may also affect seasonal availability of flowering plants. This requires beekeepers to use artificial sources (sugar syrup, corn syrup, and pollen substitutes) to try to meet the increased nutritional demands of their colonies.

Genetics:

Honey bee colonies are headed by a single queen who mates with an average of 12 males, and thus honey bee colonies are extremely genetically diverse. Several studies have demonstrated that genetic diversity improves the disease resistance and productivity of colonies, including their overwintering ability. Furthermore, strains of honey bees can have different traits - some forage for more pollen, while others are more adept at hygienic behavior, in which diseased or parasitized brood is removed. Several breeding programs are underway to develop stocks of bees that are more resistance to diseases and parasites, are better at overwintering in specific climates, and are productive and gentle.

Queen Quality:
The honey bee queen is responsible for producing all the workers in the colony, and she lays up to 1500 eggs a day. Poor quality queens can severely impact colony health. Queens with low egg-laying capacity can limit the numbers of health workers produced, while unhealthy queens can die or be killed by workers, causing a break in brood rearing that again limits colony growth and productivity. Poor quality queens are consistently cited by beekeepers as a major factor underlying colony failure, and a longitudinal study of colonies indicated that loss of a queen or lack of laying by a queen was one of the two factors linked to colony loss. Several factors seems to impact queen quality, including rearing conditions and mating number.

Management:
Proper management of honey bee colonies is a critical component of their health and productivity. Many of the stressors listed on this page can be mitigated by using the proper techniques. Beekeepers need to place their colonies is appropriate locations, which allow access to adequate foraging sites and are distant from areas where pesticides are being applied (honey bees can forage up to 5 km away from their colonies). Beekeepers can provide supplementary nutrition, in the form of sucrose solution or protein patties, during periods of low nectar flow. Beekeepers can monitor for pests, such as Varroa mites and Nosema microporidia, and use chemical or non-chemical methods to control these as needed. Beekeepers can minimize exposure to pathogens, such as viruses and bacteria, by systematically replacing used brood comb with fresh comb. Using genetic stocks of bees that more resistant to pests and pathogens is also an excellent way to reduce complications from these two stressors. Finally, rapid supercedure of poor quality queen honey bees can lead to colony losses, and thus purchases queens from excellent sources or rearing queens locally can improve colony productivity and health. For more information, please see the Honey Bee Best Management Practices guide that has been developed by the Managed Pollinator Coordinated Agriculture Program (CAP) and Project Apis m (PAm): http://www.extension.org/pages/33379/best-management-practices-bmps-for-beekeepers-pollinating-californias-agricultural-crops

Download this PDF to learn more about global Honey Bee colony disorders and other threats to insect pollinators."Introduction
Current evidence demonstrates that a sixth major extinction of biological diversity event is underway.1. The Earth is losing between one and ten percent of biodiversity per decade2, mostly due to habitat loss, pest invasion, pollution, over-harvesting and disease3. Certain natural ecosystem services are vital for human societies. Many fruit, nut, vegetable, legume, and seed crops depend on pollination. Pollination services are provided both by wild, free-living organisms (mainly bees, but also to name a few many butterflies, moths and flies), and by commercially managed bee species. Bees are the predominant and most economically important group of pollinators in most geographical regions. The Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO)4 estimates that out of some 100 crop species which provide 90% of food worldwide, 71 of these are bee-pollinated. In Europe alone, 84% of the 264 crop species are animalpollinated and 4 000 vegetable varieties exist thanks to pollination by bees 5. The production value of one tonne of pollinator-dependent crop is approximately five times higher than one of those crop categories that do not depend on insects. Has a “pollinator crisis” really been occurring during recent decades, or are these concerns just another sign of global biodiversity decline? Several studies have highlighted different factors leading to the pollinators’ decline that have been observed around the world. This bulletin considers the latest scientific findings and analyses possible answers to this question. As the bee group is the most important pollinator worldwide, this bulletin focuses on the instability of wild and managed bee populations."Excerpts from the PDF

On Thursday, August 27, 2015 the Organic Consumer Association launched an attack on the credibility and impartiality of the Pollinator Partnership. It is critical to set the record straight about P2’s projects, mission, and funding. The Organic Consumer Association, in its zeal to ban the class of pesticides known as neonicotinoids, has painted our organization as a PR effort of the pesticide industry – nothing could be further from the truth, and the damage that this kind of falsehood perpetrates needs to be addressed directly and clearly.

The P2 stand on the role of neonicotinoids in CCD, as outlined in the letter OCA posted, is based on real science and represents the position of most truly science-based organizations. Colony Collapse Disorder, per se, has largely ceased to be the main cause of honey bee deaths. Unsustainable overwintering and now summer death tolls are key current concern in bee health and must be addressed. Simply put, the P2 position is that there is too much use of ALL chemicals (we point out that over 40 different chemicals have been found in hives). We believe that educating farmers in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is the smartest and most effective way to affect change.

While it may take years to determine the veracity of lethal and sub-lethal impacts of neonicotinoids, right now we can help pollinators by creating habitat, something every university research institution and organization that has studied pollinator issues agrees must happen. That practical approach is exactly what we have put our energy into, and in keeping with our decades long tradition, we have engaged every stakeholder who can impact pollinator issues –farmers, gardeners, government agencies, environmental groups, corporations, and even pesticide manufacturers . This open dialogue is often an important component in getting real projects done in support of pollinators; while the perspectives expressed in the dialogue are vastly different, the search for common ground can yield practical results. Those results, particularly when it comes to healthy bee forage, will help bees survive.

The Pollinator Partnership is a 501 (c) 3 non-profit organization that has been dedicated to the health and welfare of all pollinating species for nearly 20 years, well before the introduction of neonicotinoid pesticides. For that time, we have been tirelessly addressing all the factors that can negatively impact pollinator health: habitat loss, climate change, pests like the Varroa Mite, and yes, agricultural pesticides. For OCA to claim that a holistic approach to helping honey bees is prejudiced, biased or aims to “defend, deny, deflect” is simply astounding. Pollinator Partnership stands for solid science and balanced approaches, not for extreme petition-driven marketing ploys.

For nearly two decades, Pollinator Partnership has been responsible for creating continent-wide programs to raise awareness about pollinator issues, but also to create actions to promote and protect them. Our signature initiatives include:

Pollinator Week, now in its 8th year which started as a US Forest Service suggestion, became a US. Senate resolution and has grown into a global effort to support pollinators that was endorsed by all 50 U.S. governors in 2015

For our efforts, we have received the highest national award for conservation given by the Garden Club of America, the Cynthia Pratt Laughlin Award for our work in pollinators, as well as twice being named Pesticide Environmental Stewardship Champions by EPA. We have made pollinator plantings bloom on Super Fund sites and transformed ravaged landscapes into healthy habitat. Simply put, we are recognized as a trusted and reliable source.

The funding for our work comes from over 3000 individual sources – government grants, foundation grants, individual donors, memberships, gifts, and corporate sponsorships – including from organizations whose values we share and others whose perspectives differ from ours. No matter what the funding source, we have an unblemished record of impartiality. Our gift policy is published on our web site pages and states unequivocally that our policies and programs are guided solely by unbiased science and cannot be influenced by donors.

MESSAGES ON CCD FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

A Message from the Executive Director on CCD and Neonicotinoids

Neonicotinoids come with a bee hazard statement on the label as they have been determined to have the potential to harm bees; the question is, to what extent are these substances alone responsible for CCD (Frazier et al. 2008; vanEngelsdorp et al. 2008; vanEngelsdorp et al. 2009)? The most recent comprehensive report on honey bee colony health from the Bee Informed Partnership indicated CCD is contributing to less then 20% of annual loss numbers reported by beekeepers (Steinhauer et al. 2015). CCD is just one of the many problems that have beset honey bees; and there are considerably more issues that face the rest of the pollinating community including other bees, bats, birds, butterflies, flies and more (NRC 2006).

The Pollinator Partnership feels that science needs to lead the discussion on neonicotinoids, CCD, and all pollinator health issues, and that decisions based on anything less have the potential to lead us into more, not fewer, problems.

Neonicotinoids were developed as a response to and as a replacement for previous chemicals that had proven risks associated with bee kills and human health concerns (personal communication Berenbam, 2013). With respect to neonicotinoids, we have ample data that is providing conflicting results as to impacts on colony survival and sublethal effects for both individual bees and colonies (Collins et al. 2004; Desneux et al. 2007; Frazier et al. 2008; Frazier et al. 2011); and we are hoping that new science, including research we are conducting, will help clarify this. Having said this, we also know that no science will ever provide perfect, clear, unequivocal answers – sometimes it provides quite the opposite.

The observations and insights of beekeepers and citizen scientists have also added invaluable information, but once again with conflicting outcomes. Add to this the distances where bee foraging can take place and the number of diseases and parasites that can be present, and a degree of uncertainty in cause and effect is inevitable.

When the question is complex, as this one is, the temptation to yield to a single, simple solution is a natural inclination but not always a productive one. One must remember that it is the nature of science to be uncertain. Scientific inquiry works to reduce the unknown, but can never fully remove it. In the case of neonicotinoids, are we even asking the right questions in our scientific inquiries? Are we observing the total picture of the field experience? Rather than studying or eliminating individual chemicals, should we be assessing the environmental milieu, the volume of chemical exposure and the interactions of pesticides? Evidence is mounting that the cumulative and compounded effects of all pesticides are driving trends in bee mortality (Schmuck et al. 2003). With the use of neonicotinoids, must every seed be treated at every planting? What nutritional support may be lacking, due to monoculture, lack of forage, or insufficient circumstantial supplementation, even in the absence of chronic or acute exposures to pesticides (DeGrandi-Hoffman et al. 2009; Genersch et al. 2010; Cox-Foster et al. 2007; Pettis et al. 2013)?

Systemic pesticides deliver their benefits in a compact manner, reducing direct or drift exposure to non-target species, but they, like other aerial products are often applied in a prophylactic manner before the pest incident threshold is met and before other approaches can be attempted. This is done as a protection to the crop and the producer, but potentially at the expense of pollinators. Many pesticides such as organophosphates (some of which are systemic), carbamates, and pyrethroids have both direct and indirect adverse effects on bees. In an altered scenario, who will bear the cost of the loss of the pollinators or the cost of the failed crop? Do we really want to pit these two vital agricultural forces against one another? Is there some way to work together to find a solution?

Today, over 90 different chemicals have been identified in samples of pollen collected by bees (Stoner and Eitzer 2013; Mullin et al. 2010); which is the right chemical to eliminate? Recent studies have shown that nutritional deficiencies have a significant role in suppressing bee defense systems when confronting any toxin (DeGrandi-Hoffman et al. 2009). Varroa destructor, the mite that has plagued honey bees for 20 years, has become a more persistent and ubiquitous problem; further, the accumulation of miticides applied as a potential remedy may have inadvertently exacerbated the situation (vanEngelsdorp and Meixner 2010).

Changing weather patterns affect pollinators’ access to forage and water and may affect their own emergence in the delicate balance of phenology. The record warmth of the winter of 2011 brought the lowest overwintering deaths since 2006, to be followed by harsher conditions the next year and a dramatic record high in bee deaths. And finally, beekeepers who have never had any previous problems, even during CCD’s past 5 years, have seen catastrophic losses this year – since applications of pesticides have not changed, what would be the cause of this shift (Kaplan 2015; Steinhauer et al 2015; CAPA 2015)? USDA reports cite poor foraging conditions, an increase in Varroa destructor and the viruses they can vector between bees, as significant factors contributing to losses. All of these questions point to factors that have been working together against the health of pollinators – what we don’t need is to compound the problem through less-than-rigorous solutions.

The Pollinator Partnership’s perspective is that real and lasting, positive change in the health of pollinators must be based on unfettered scientific analysis, the implementation of best practices on the part of producers, beekeepers, decision- makers and the public that take pollinators into account, and the engagement of all stakeholders in open and practical discussions that do not take statements, or science, out of context. This is a position that, in a polarized society, is not easy to advocate or maintain; but we believe it is the only true path to progress in building sustainable ecosystems and agriculture, both of which depend on the extensive contributions of pollinators. And both of which are urgently needed.

In working with all stakeholders, we choose to focus on the end result – our question is always - what will bring the greatest benefit to pollinators, support food production and a healthy environment, and in a practical and supportable way, build economic and food security and sustainability for the future? And that course of action requires thoughtful examination of evidence and thorough but expedient, strategic action.

We have listed most neonicotinoid studies on our website here and would welcome any new studies for posting there. We appreciate the concern for pollinators that we have helped nurture over these last 18 years; and we recognize how frustrating it is to all concerned not to be able to identify a smoking gun, a conspiracy or an easy path out of this mess. We pledge that we will continue to seek engagement, sound science, consensus, and practical and expeditious actions to help pollinators. We encourage those who support this approach to join us. Feel free to send comments to info@pollinator.org.

The following list of peer reviewed publications has been generated by members of the pollinator LISTSERV. Some of these studies report tests of native bee/honey bee interactions, others provide background and insight into potential interactions. If you have an additional study to add to this list please email info@pollinator.org. We are also in the process of developing a new 2012 NAPPC Task Force that will take on this issue. If you are interested in chairing or participating in this task force please contact Vicki Wojcik, vw@pollinator.org.

Individual Worker Honey Bee Life Cycle
The entire bee hive has an annual cycle from spring to fall, with a less active winter phase. Individual bee life cycles occur throughout this colony cycle. It takes more than 20 days for an egg to develop into a worker bee. Once hatched, each worker bee lives for about 40 days. Half of a bee’s life is spent in the hive working, the other half is spent outside of the hive foraging.

Larval Worker Honey Bee Life Cycle
The queen bee lays an egg into an empty cell – this is different than solitary bees that lay their eggs on a pollen ball. The egg hatches into a larva that is fed by worker nurse bees. After about 5-6 days the larva will turn into a pupa. Nurse bees put a cap on the cell once there is a pupa to protect the developing adult. After about 10-12 days the pupa will emerge. Temperature plays a big role in how insects develop. This is why the number of days from egg to larva to pupa to adult can vary slightly.

Adult Worker Honey Bee Life Cycle
After the adult emerges she beings take on tasks in the hive. She spends the first few days cleaning cells (day 1 and 2), then she takes on the role of nurse (day 3 to 11) where she feeds developing larvae. After feeding duty she works to caps cells with wax that she produces (day 12-17). Her final days working in the hive are spent guarding the front entrance (day 18-21). After about three weeks in the hive she transitions to the role of forager and goes out to collect food for the colony (23 days and beyond).

The total worker bee life span from laid egg to the death of the adult averages 7 to 9 weeks. It takes 3 weeks for the egg to develop into a worker adult. The adult then lives for 4 to 6 weeks. Some worker bees that are produced in the fall live longer than 9 weeks because they spend the winter in e hive and have early foraging duties in the spring.

After a few days the egg will hatch and become a larva that quickly eats the food source left by the female.

The larva grows and eventually becomes a pupa. The pupa is the transformation stage when cells in the body rearrange and mature and the bee starts to look like the adult bees we are familiar seeing. The pupa hatches from its case and then emerges from the nest by chewing its way through leaves or mud.

An adult bee emerges from the nest! This bee then mates and the cycle is ready to start all over again.

Once a female has mated she works all day foraging, visiting flowers collecting pollen and nectar that she will use to build pollen balls. A female solitary bee makes 15–20 flower visits to complete just one cell in a nest. Pollination occurs as the female bumps into the flower’s anthers and stigma during these visits.

Once a female has built all of her cells in one nest she seals off the end and leaves to start another nest.

COLONY CYCLE (see illustrations to the right)Winter (not shown)
A bee hive has a season cycle the repeats from year to year. During the winter a hive is dormant. The bees in the colony surround the queen and keep her warm. The colony survives the winter by feeding off of honey stores that were collected the previous year.

Spring (1)
When the weather gets warmer and spring flowers start to bloom the colony becomes more active (1). Overwintering foragers leave the hive to collect pollen and nectar; the queen has been laying eggs (between 1500 to 2000 each day) and the colony is ready for spring.

Summer (2 and 3)
In early summer (2) the colony is very active. Foragers leave daily to collect pollen and nectar and many new worker bees emerge. By late summer the colony has grown very large and strong (3). Workers start to produce new queen cells that will produce new queen bees (in warmer climates this can occur earlier in the spring as well). After the new queens hatch, they leave the colony, each taking some worker bees with them. This is called swarming.

Fall (4)
By the fall (4) the flowers have stopped blooming and are producing fruit. The colony works on storing food and foraging for nectar slows. Foragers look for water and take cleansing flights throughout the winter. The worker bees and the queen will spend the winter feeding off of their stored honey, waiting for the spring bloom of flowers.